Hindustan Times (Patiala)

RAILWAY BOARD REJIG, SERVICES MERGER PART OF OVERHAUL PLAN

- Press Trust of India ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Union Cabinet on Tuesday approved an organisati­onal restructur­ing of the Indian Railways, unifying eight services into one and making the Railway Board leaner in an attempt to overhaul and rightsize the 150year-old state transport mammoth that operates 22,000 trains every day.

The national transporte­r was due for rationalis­ation, with the government setting up several committees to chart a road map.

The Cabinet cleared the proposal for a single cadre, named the Indian Railway Management Service, that will replace the current eight Group A services. It will be created in consultati­on with the Department of Personnel and Training and the Union Public Service Commission to facilitate hiring in the next recruitmen­t year.

› The mishap was a tragedy waiting to happen, one that was in the making over the past so many years, right under the watch of the keepers of the law.

JUSTICE PS GOPINATHAN COMMISSION REPORT

KOCHI: The Justice PS Gopinathan Commission, which is probing the 2016 mishap involving fireworks at a temple in Kollam district, has found lapses on the part of the police and the district administra­tion.

In one of the worst temple tragedies in Kerala, 110 people died and more than 300 were injured during an explosion caused due to an unauthoris­ed display of fireworks on the Puttingal temple precincts in the early hours of April 10, 2016.

“What happened that day was the denounceme­nt of a criminal and disregard for law and public safety that had fossilised over the years; for which responsibi­lity rests equally on the shoulders of the organising committee, the fireworks contractor­s, as well as on all the authoritie­s involved,” the judicial panel said in its report submitted to the government in July this year.

“The mishap was a tragedy waiting to happen, one that was in the making over the past so many

years, right under the watch of the keepers of the law,” the report added. Had the district collector and the additional district magistrate “conveyed their refusal to permit” the display of fireworks, the display would not have occurred, it said.

“A detailed inquiry into the tragedy at Puttingal has revealed that it was the result of coming together of a lot of diverse causative factors, including the adamant stance of the temple committee to have a massive fireworks display without ensuring minimum safety standards...,” according to the report.

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